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Virginia lawmakers finished up the 2018 session Saturday without doing their most important job: passing a state budget.

Legislators ended in a stalemate over whether to expand Medicaid to about 300,000 low-income adults. A similar budget impasse over Medicaid in 2014 took months to resolve and was largely split along partisan lines.

Now, it's mostly Republicans fighting among themselves over the issue, after years of near-unanimous opposition to expansion. The GOP-controlled House backs it, while the Republican-led Senate opposes it. New Gov. Ralph Northam, a Democrat, has made Medicaid expansion a top priority.

The disagreement is causing serious discord within the Republican Party and a compromise could be months away. Northam said he wants a compromise as soon as possible.

Republicans have defeated dozens of proposal from Democrats, from bills dealing with bump stocks, background checks, and high-capacity magazines to ones requiring more training for permits and locks on guns in day cares.

Since the Florida school shooting last month that left 17 people dead, tempers have flared and lawmakers have taken to the House floor to deliver lengthy speeches about the issue. Both parties have accused the other of distorting their views.

Virginia has, so far, avoided the turmoil over sexual harassment allegations that has roiled other statehouses across the country following the allegations against film producer Harvey Weinstein and the ensuing (hash)MeToo social media movement.

Both chambers have passed bills that would mandate sexual harassment training for General Assembly members and other legislative branch employees.

A push to bring Virginia in line with almost every other state and ban the personal use of political campaign funds passed the House but died in the Senate with little discussion. Virginia has one of the least regulated campaign finance systems in the country, with lawmakers only barred from using campaign funds for personal use when closing accounts.

Northam approved legislation that could lead to substantial new additions to most Virginians' electric bills while making it easier for utilities to build renewable energy projects and improve the electric grid. The bill, backed by Dominion Energy and Appalachian Power, passed with broad support despite warnings from Attorney General Mark Herring that it could allow utilities to continue charging higher-than-necessary electric rates.

COAL ASH

Both chambers have advanced a bill that would block for at least another year Dominion's plans to bury coal ash - the heavy metal-laden byproduct of burning coal to produce electricity - in place at four power plants across the state.

Bills backed by Democrats that would have prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity in public employment or housing, brought Virginia laws in line with the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on gay marriage and expanded family leave have been defeated.

Republicans have emphasized their work on pragmatic, kitchen table issues but also passed hot-button legislation that's likely to be vetoed. That includes a measure outlawing so-called "sanctuary cities," which Virginia doesn't have.

Northam and Republicans did agree to increase the threshold for what's considered felony larceny.